Kelly was a distinguished lawyer and judge whose parliamentary career was characterised by his willingness to cut across traditional party boundaries in an attempt to achieve legal and electoral reform.
Kelly quickly established himself as a talented lawyer with a reputation for making complex cases intelligible to juries. He practised on the home circuit for a year before joining the Norfolk circuit in 1826. He meanwhile established his own practice in London, specialising in mercantile law, and became standing counsel for the East India Company and the Bank of England. In 1834 he was made king’s counsel and was elected a bencher of his inn the following year.
Kelly’s early attempts to establish a foothold in Parliament were protracted and marked by controversy. After an unsuccessful candidacy for the cinque port of Hythe in 1830, where he had been brought forward by local ratepayers protesting against not having the vote, he stood as a Conservative for the notoriously corrupt borough of Ipswich, home to his Chauntry estates, at the 1832 general election.
Kelly’s legal background became evident in his early contributions to debate. A frequent speaker, he displayed a ‘tendency to platitude and to excessive verbiage’, but his grasp of the intricacies of the law, along with his desire to ‘proffer explanation to the utmost adjective and comma’, gave him an air of authority in the Commons chamber.
Kelly returned to the Commons in March 1843 after a narrow victory at the Cambridge by-election, where he presented himself as a zealous supporter of the established church and an ‘uncompromising opponent of the Anti-Corn Law League’.
With his support for repeal losing him the support of local Conservatives, Kelly declined to stand again for Cambridge at the 1847 general election, and instead offered for Lyme Regis as ‘an independent man, upon independent principles’.
Returned unopposed, Kelly took the Chiltern Hundreds, 29 Apr. 1852, before coming forward for Suffolk East, home to his Chauntry estates. Addressing the electors, he regretted his vote for corn law repeal, declaring that the measure had proved to be ‘completely destructive of the best interests of the country’, and, returning to his original position on the matter, backed the abolition of the Maynooth grant.
After another brief and uneventful spell as solicitor-general ended with the fall of Derby’s government in December 1852, Kelly turned his attention to electoral reform. Working with Disraeli and Stanley, he prepared a bill for the prevention of bribery, the central feature of which was his proposal to appoint an election officer, through whom all the candidates’ expenses would be paid.
Now a steady attender, Kelly followed Disraeli into the division lobby on most major issues.
Following the fall of Palmerston’s ministry over its response to the Orsini bomb plot, Kelly was made attorney-general in Derby’s second administration in February 1858. Returned unopposed at the by-election necessitated by his appointment, he stated that Palmerston’s conspiracy to murder bill had been unnecessarily ‘forced’ upon the country.
Returned comfortably in second place at the 1859 general election, Kelly resurrected some of his earlier legislative projects. His bill to amend the 1854 Corrupt Practices Prevention Act was essentially based on his chief proposal made in 1854: to make bribery impossible by compelling the candidate to pay all expenses through the hands of a public officer, 9 Feb. 1860.
At the 1865 general election he insisted that the malt tax was not just an agricultural question, ‘but one that affects the labouring classes and the humbler portion of the middle classes’.
Kelly’s appointment was resented by his old foe Rigby Wason, who subsequently revived their dispute by petitioning the House of Lords to inquire into Kelly’s evidence to the 1835 Ipswich election committee.
Kelly continued to serve as lord chief baron, despite his health failing from exhaustion, until his death at the Bedford Hotel, Brighton, in September 1880.
Although undoubtedly a controversial and divisive figure in Ipswich politics, where his name ‘was once the signal for letting loose the dogs of war’, in the Commons Kelly sought cross-party support for his legal reforms and often gave generous support to his political opponents on legal questions, though his ambition to reform the death penalty, the right of appeal in criminal cases, and the consolidation of the law were ultimately frustrated.
